Deano & Jo are joined by Cat Head Biscuit Boys in their CD release show that’s more than meets the eyes and ears

Jo Walston and Dean Schlabowske / Olivia Perillo photo

by Dominick Cross

OPELOUSAS, La. — At first glance, one could assume that the Sunday double-header at the Whirlybird was a cool way to pass a good time on a hot June afternoon in Louisiana.

It was more than that. It was about beginning anew and all that comes with it; it was about moving on, but not without a hint of sorrow.

It was a debut record release event for a couple of talented and edgy honky tonkin’ transplants who have set up their base camp in Lafayette.

It was also the return gig of a string band, long-time absent from the local scene due to the illness and death of one of its co-founders, the pandemic, and the unexpected find with the addition of a youthful musician.

And it all worked out.

The house was nearly full, the music was pretty damn good and the scent of some tasty Cajun fare, by Jolie Meaux’s Porch, Wine & Gravy, wafted through the air.

If you get a chance to see Deano & Jo and/or the Cat Head Biscuit Boys, do it.

Deano & Jo

In some ways, while it was recorded in 2022, the debut release by Dean Schlabowske and Jo Walston, Deano & Jo, was decades in the making.

But first, a little background.

Among other bands, Dean may be best known for his 25-and-counting years and a dozen recordings with the “Cash meets Clash” sound of the Waco Brothers out of Chicago.

Likewise, Jo and Austin’s Meat Purveyors, known for “punk grass tales of redneck debauchery and woe,” go back to at least 1998 and have six CDs to show for it.

And with both bands on Bloodshot Records at the time, touring together was a natural fit.

“We played a lot of gigs together over the years,” said Dean. “The Waco Brothers and the Meat Purveyors were kindred spirits right from the start. We all became good friends.”

Dean would sometimes head to Austin for his side projects and “play with Jo’s band because they were great people and great players,” he said. “So we had a bunch of projects over the years long before Jo and I were a couple.”

Together in different configurations, Dean and Jo have three recordings.

“We did stuff together before that, but it was more like my projects that I had Jo sing on,” said Dean. “Whereas this is definitely our project.”

Deano & Jo at the Whirlybird, Sunday, June 25, 2023 (left to right): Cameron Fontenot, Jason Norris, Jo Walston, Pudd Sharp, Jean Torres, and Dean Schlabowske. Dominick Cross / photo

The first inception of Dean and the Meat Purveyors was called Deano and the Purvs. Ice Cold Singles followed and then, sans the Purvs, it was Trash Mountain Trio.

“I will say that compared to all the ways we’ve worked together in the past,” said Dean. “This is really different because it’s a true musical partnership.”

The project was recorded at Staffland Studio by Chris Stafford and is out on Plenty Tuff Records. The initial sessions began in April, but overdubbing/mixing sessions “took the better part of 2022 to complete,” Dean said.

“Once it was done, it took a little while to get on a release schedule because we decided to put it out on the label that my band, the Waco Brothers, has started called Plenty Tough Records,” he said.

In addition, the Waco Brothers had a new recording hitting the streets, “and I didn’t want to try to promote the two records at the same time,” said Dean. “So we held off an extra few months because of that, too.

“It’s felt like it’s taken forever to get out,” he said. “But it’s finally here.”

In the past, Dean would let Jo and band know he had songs and a record in mind and they’d all go from there.

“It was more like them sitting in on my side project,” Dean said. “This is more a real reflection of Jo’s and my shared passions and tastes in music.”

Think George Jones, Ray Price, Loretta Lynn and Buck Owens in the country music realm; bluegrass faves include the Stanley Brothers, Hazel Dickens and Jimmy Martin — with a twist and even a shout or two.

“It’s a synthesis of each of our approaches,” said Jo.

The Deano & Jo release features compadres from the past and present.

The new album includes Mark Rubin (Bad Livers) whose bass brings the “sound of punk rock bluegrass, kind of, or high octane, like edgy bluegrass,” said Jo. “And that’s what got me involved and helped me formulate what it is I liked about bluegrass and what kind of band I wanted to have.”

Rubin, a resident of New Orleans these days, hopped on board and “he did all of his parts in one session in one day. And then we overdubbed from there.”

So, with Jo on acoustic guitar and Dean on electric guitar and Rubin on bass, the basic tracks were laid down.

Beth Chrisman, of Austin via Alaska, joined in on fiddle. She’s currently with Silas Lowe.

“Actually, the Meat Purveyors met Beth in Alaska when we played up there in Fairbanks way back in the late 90’s, early 2000,” said Jo. “She was just starting to learn how to play fiddle.

“So now she’s in Austin and she plays with everybody,” she said. “She’s fabulous. She did some great solos on the record. You can tell the love is there, it’s nice what she did for us.”

From Dean’s “Chicago alternative country world” came Robbie Fulks and some flat picking.

“Robbie was another label mate at Bloodshot and a pretty celebrated songwriter and phenomenal guitar player,” said Dean.

Locals Stafford and Chas Justus added their talents on steel and guitar, respectively.

“Nobody plays drums,” said Jo.

Dean concurred: “And no one plays drums.”

Well, on Sunday, the set will be a tad different from the CD.

“I will say that compared to all the ways we’ve worked together in the past. This is really different because it’s a true musical partnership.”

Dean Schlabowske

“We decided we needed to do more of what I’d call a ‘standard lineup’ with electric bass and drums for the show,” said Dean.

The line-up will also look a bit different as summertime is road time for many musicians. So the line-up will be Cameron Fontenot, fiddle; Jason Norris, mandolin; Pudd Sharp, bass; Jean Torres, drums; and Dean and Jo.

Back to the recording, you’ll find previously written originals from Dean’s extensive songbook and a few covers by the couple’s honky tonk heroes and bluegrass stars.

“We wanted to do some bluegrass/honky tonk cover versions that we felt were a little more deep cuts, like, not things that you’d expect to hear,” Dean said.

A Texan with 36 years in Austin, Jo was joined by Dean for three years before the couple moved briefly to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Having visited Lafayette independently and together, the couple knew they’d moved to an area high on homegrown roots music, which isn’t too distant from the honky tonk, bluegrass and alt-country that has defined their music careers.

“We knew that we had simpatico, musical passion with the whole rootsy music and Americana,” said Jo. “Cajun kind of goes hand-in-hand with honky tonk and bluegrass.

“We just decided to try to jump in and meet as many people that we could vibe with on that level as soon as possible,” she said. “But you have to do that when you move to a new place anyway.”

Austin may still be weird, but more so, it’s a pricey place to live. Although the couple moved to Milwaukee to look after Dean’s ailing mother, “the plan was always to get back down south,” said Dean.

Jo Walston and Dean Schlabowske / Olivia Perillo photo

“Both of us had been to Lafayette and loved it. Loved the culture and the music,” he said. “It’s affordable, which was a great contrast to anything we could do in Texas.”

“I’m a Southern woman,” said Jo. “My people go on back, way back and I just needed to get back down here — at least close enough.”

So, with Lafayette conveniently located between New Orleans and Houston and Austin 5.5 hours away, it made for a smart move in more ways than one.

“For me, it’s kind of a perfect place to be,” said Jo. “We love the people and the music and the food and the way that people, even if they’re really old, like 80, 90 years old, people are out there partying and dancing and stuff.

“We want to go out like that,” she said.

“Hopefully a pleasant march towards death,” Dean added.

So they settled in Lafayette in 2022 and kept a low-ish profile on the music scene. As a duo, they played a fundraiser with other bands not too long ago and have spent some time on the Whirlybird stage — that kind of thing.

“For the first year we were here, we decided not to play live and so, really, it was just a matter of getting the sessions together (for the recording), which didn’t take as much time like if we were trying to do gigs all that while,” said Dean.

But the itch to do the record had to be scratched for personal and professional reasons.

“It felt to me like we wanted to just jump in because we found Staffland, we found Staff (Chris Stafford) and we’ve been wanting to do a record for a while,” said Jo. “When we moved here, we knew that we weren’t able to gig if no one knew who we were.”

So they secured Staffland Studio for a recording session and got to know Stafford and other local musicians in the process.

Dean said it was also a way to make some friends “who play music around here before just immediately trying to get gigs and form a band with people we don’t know.”

Going forward, another full record is not in the near future, but “we want to go a bit more modern route and record and release singles digitally,” said Dean. “We want to be an act that plays really regularly and regionally.

“We’re hoping at one point to get it to where we can play once a month in the Lafayette area and once a month in New Orleans,” he said. “And then a smattering of other gigs at places that we can drive to in a day.”

In the meantime, “we just want to keep writing and releasing new music and hopefully solidify a group of local musicians that are playing with us,” said Dean. “And once we develop a little bit of a following, we’ll actually be able to pay them decently.”

As a prolific songwriter, “I want an outlet for that and it’s pretty easy now that we’re in the digital age,” he said.

“Yeah, we’re just going to keep making music because what else is there to do that’s good,” said Jo. “It’s really one of the few things left that’s just fun.

“We’re going to do it,” she said. “We’re going to keep doing it.”

Cat Head Biscuit Boys

The late Bruce MacDonald, left; with Roger Kash. / Olivia Perillo

It wasn’t like the Cat Head Biscuit Boys were calling it quits when guitarist/vocalist and cofounder, Bruce MacDonald, died late April 2022. After all, the band had been on hiatus during the long illness that would take his life, and there’s also the COVID thing.

“Bruce was sick for a long time, so that kind of derailed us,” said Roger Kash, who with MacDonald and Ben Shank were the nucleus of the band. “Our sound revolved around me, Bruce and Ben, the fiddle player. We just had this unique thing.”

As time passed (about three-and-a-half years), Kash and Shank concluded they missed having a band, Cat Head Biscuit Boys in particular.

“I miss playing out a lot and so did Ben,” said Kash. “So we decided to do it again.”

Once the decision was made to keep the Biscuits (Kash’s nickname for the band) playing, filling the roster, well, at least filling one position, was daunting.

“I was having a hard time finding a guitar player because I was always thinking we’ve got to find somebody like Bruce — which is impossible.”

As it happened, thanks to a tip from Chas Justus, a phenomenal guitar player himself, a guitarist was a bass player away.

Eric Moody, bassist with the Biscuits in their last rendering, happened to have a guitar-playing son in Ethan Moody, who plays with Jeffery Broussard and the Creole Cowboys.

Kash asked Eric if his son “could cut it.” The dad’s three-part answer was: a) “Oh, yeah!” b) “He loved that band.” and c) “He’d love to do it.”

It was all settled at the first rehearsal a couple of months ago.

“He was great. It sounded different, obviously,” said Kash. “He was really into it, very enthusiastic. He picks things up really quick.”

Kash had some reacquainting to do himself.

“I hadn’t played a lot of material in years, so it was me, like, relearning this stuff,” he said. “Or re-remembering this stuff even though we played it for 10 years.”

With a nod to Shank — “Ben would always bring in these great choices of things to play like he always did” — so keep an ear out for familiar tunes from days of yore, with some new music.

Cat Head Biscuit Boys are: Ben Shank, fiddle; Eric Moody, bass; Ethan Moody, guitar; Roger Kash, mandolin and mandola.

“I was having a hard time finding a guitar player because I was always thinking we’ve got to find somebody like Bruce — which is impossible.”

Roger Kash

“The only thing with Bruce being gone is that all three of us, me, Ben and Bruce would share lead vocal duties,” he said. “But Ethan can sing. Ethan’s got a good voice. So we’ve slowly got to work up songs for Ethan to sing.”

In the meantime, Kash will sing a majority of the songs with Ben taking on some. “And I think Ethan’s going to probably have one that he’s going to sing on Sunday,” said Kash. “He’s a such a sweet kid and he’s just a really good musician. We’re kind of lucky to have him.”

The Biscuits, if you are wondering, is a string band.

“We’re definitely a string band. And we play all different kinds of music and songs that we love, songs that other people don’t cover that we have our own arrangements for,” Cash said. “It’s an interesting mix of stuff.”

Cat Head Biscuit Boys at the Whirlybird, June 25, 2023 (from left): Ben Shank, Eric Moody, Roger Kash and Ethan Moody. / Dominick Cross photo

Take “Going Up The Country” by Canned Heat. You’ll think again when you hear it played Sunday.

“It’s got that flute part in it. Ben rearranged it where. He’s playing that flute part on the fiddle,” said Kash. “We’ve got a real nice arrangement for that.”

There’s a good chance you won’t hear (just yet) the late David Egan’s “Creole Tomato,” a mainstay with the Biscuits.

“Now we’ve got to figure out who’s going to sing ‘Creole Tomato,’ which is probably our best known song,” Kash said. “It was on that little record that we made (four-song, self-titled EP on Valcour Records (2017).”

MacDonald, who was in Egan’s band for years, sang the song for the Biscuits.

“So it’s hard for me to hear it without Bruce singing it,” said Kash. “But we’ll eventually bring it back. Either me or Ben will sing it. We’ll see what happens.”

Kash said while he hadn’t contacted other venues just yet, he’s already hearing from a couple.

“I guess the word is out,” he said, noting the Biscuits have a gig next weekend at Atmosphere and at The Hideaway on Lee in July. “And then Black Pot Festival called and wants us to play there, too.

“I guess we’re back,” Kash said. “Sorta, kinda.”

(Fun fact: Cat Head Biscuit Boys’ first gig was Shank’s wedding about a dozen years ago.)

Roger Kash on fellow Cat Head, Bruce MacDonald: ‘He played with such a fierceness and tons of soul’

Bruce MacDonald, left, with Roger Kash. Olivia Perillo/photo

by Roger Kash

My dear friend and musical compadre, the inimitable Bruce “Weasel” MacDonald, soulful guitar slinger and Louisiana musical legend caught the bus to the great beyond this morning (Sunday, March 27, 2022) after a long and protracted illness.

He was a musical force in both Lafayette and New Orleans and will be dearly missed by all who had the pleasure of sharing the stage with him.

He was in countless legendary bands – from Rufus Jagneaux (who doesn’t remember “Opelousas Sostan?”), the first Cajun rock outfit Coteau, The Song Dogs, Hard Heads, Little Queenie & The Percolators…and many others. He formed Runnin’ Pardners with George Porter of Meters fame and was the late David Egan’s longtime guitar slinger.

I had the pleasure of being his band mate in the Cat Head Biscuit Boys for over 10 years. He taught me so much and encouraged me to sing when I didn’t even know I had a voice.

Bruce MacDonald, guitarist extraordinaire, and, quite the character

Heart poured in every note’

I’d seen him wipe the stage with guitar players who were much more famous than he…he played with such a fierceness and tons of soul, wrote great songs….most of all, he was a great pal and I’ll miss him dearly. He was so unique, there’ll never be another quite like him.
Thanks buddy for all the laughs and inspiration. Love ya to the moon and back.

Roger Kash, musician/Freetown Radio program host on KRVS/88.7 FM, played with Bruce MacDonald in the band Cat Head Biscuit Boys. Kash granted Bayou Hack Press permission to use his facebook post about Bruce MacDonald.

Rare air, rare breed: Lifelong friend remembers Bruce MacDonald, guitarist extraordinaire, and, quite the character

Hard Heads, circa 2002, from left, Ben Shank, Danny Kimball, Gary Newman, Bruce MacDonald, Gary Graeff. (the late) Ken Tiger/photo

by DOMINICK CROSS

LAFAYETTE, LA. — Another impactful musician will no longer walk among us.

Stellar guitarist, Bruce MacDonald, 74, died Sunday morning (April 27, 2022) after a long illness basically in the form of congestive heart failure.

MacDonald played with Zachary Richard, David Egan, The Bad Roads, Rufus Jagneaux, Coteau, Little Queenie, George Porter, Exuma, Hard Heads, The Song Dogs, Native Sons, King Creole, Mamou, BeauSoleil, Cat Head Biscuit Boys and others.

There won’t be a funeral, so you’ll not find his body in a casket or his ashes in an urn because MacDonald donated his body to science.

But what you will find is a grand event, organized by guitarist Tommy Shreve, set for 7 p.m., April 20, 2022, entitled “Lafayette Musicians Unite for a Brother, A Memorial Benefit for Bruce MacDonald,” at Warehouse 535, 535 Garfield St., Lafayette.

Music will be provided by Red Beans and Rice Revue, The Bucks, Has Beans with special guests Sonny Landreth, Zachary Richard, Roddie Romero and Alex MacDonald, Bruce’s son.

“This guy has contributed so much musically,” said Danny Kimball, drummer/percussionist and lifelong friend of MacDonald. “To think about Lafayette music if he hadn’t been here, there’d probably no Rufus, no Coteau, not mention all of the other bands.

“He moved the music itself forward in this area,” he said. “I mean, Coteau changed Cajun music.”

Kimball chuckled when he recalled MacDonald’s take on Cajun music.

“Bruce said, ‘It’s just folk music that’s there to be jacked-around with.’”

MacDonald also had an impact on the New Orleans music scene “with George Porter, the Song Dogs — I mean, he was working in rare air over there — Weasel was respected as a player,” said Kimball.

‘Heart poured in every note’

‘He played with such a fierceness and tons of soul’

Kimball said MacDonald, whose day job was a house painter, hadn’t worked in some time because of poor health.

That said, in addition to the April celebration of MacDonald’s life, an online fundraiser at GoFundMe was established by Kimball and Rhonda Egan under the medical, illness and healing category before he died.

Getting MacDonald on board took a some coaxing, according to Kimball.

“I knew he was going to give me every excuse in the world not to do it,” said Kimball. “That’s how he is. I said, ‘Bruce, this is something we need to do for you and we need to do for us.

“‘We’re going to have to let you go and it is not going to be easy for a lot of people in this town. And that’s when he looked at me and said, ‘Okay. I just want you to take care of Julie and take care of my boy. Make sure they’re ok.’

‘He moved the music itself forward in this area. ‘I mean, Coteau changed Cajun music.’

Danny Kimball

“And I said that’s what this money is going to be for,” said Kimball. “We’re going to make sure that she’s okay as she makes the transition to the next phase of her life.”

Julie is Julie Marshall. She and MacDonald were longtime friends before their friendship took a romantic turn and they ended up sharing a home for 20 years.

Although MacDonald and Marshall had disability incomes, “half of that left yesterday,” Kimball said Monday.

a/k/a Weasel

Going back to his teen days, MacDonald was tagged with the nickname Weasel.

“Bruce, what a character. He’s like a caricature or something, you know. It’s like you can’t create this guy. And everybody knows him in Lake Charles as Weasel — from his character.”

Bruce MacDonald Robin May/photo

MacDonald’s mother “got on me about it,” Kimball remembered. “She goes, ‘Danny. I didn’t named Bruce ‘Weasel,’ I named him Bruce.’ And I go, “‘Ok, Mrs. Weasel.’ And she put her head in her hands. She was a doll. Oh, God. Mary Ellen was so special.”

It was about a decade or more ago when MacDonald preferred his given name to his nickname.

“He was kind of tired of it,” said Kimball.

Homeboys

Kimball and MacDonald go back to their days at LaGrange High School in Lake Charles. That, coupled with the fact that they would play in bands together for nearly as long, gives the drummer keen insight into the guitar player.

“Off and on forever. Yeah, he’s family,” said Kimball. “He’s like a brother to me.”

Brotherly love, however, wasn’t in the cards at their first encounter as high school sophomores. An early version of The Bad Roads was playing a house when MacDonald and two others arrived.

“I didn’t know these people,” said Kimball, watching it all unfold behind the drum kit. “They were drunk on their ass.”

MacDonald repeatedly shouted out a request to the band.

“‘Hey, mother fuckers, play Beach Boys,’” Kimball recollected. “He wanted to hear Beach Boy songs and he was obnoxious.”

The band insisted that the rowdy trio leave the party and they left.

Three weeks later at a Lake Charles hangout, the two met again.

“Somehow, I ran into Weasel again. I’d lost my ride and I was stranded there,” said Kimball. “Bruce gave me a ride home. He was in his dad’s car. Somehow we, I forget the exact deal, but the night he gave me a ride home, he scared me to fucking death.

“He was drunk on his ass. He was going down Enterprise Boulevard about 60 mph, running stop signs. It was raining,” he continued. “And when I finally got him to my parent’s house, which was on the way to his house, I got out, closed the door and he peels out.

“I swear to God, I fell on my knees in the ditch and thanked God I’m alive,” said Kimball. “And I never wanted to see that mother fucker again.

“Of course, the next week, I was over at his house,” laughed Kimball. “I fell in love with his mother. And we just started hanging out together with his little crew.”

Guitar curious

MacDonald was learning to play guitar at the time.

“He had this thing called the Color Way,” Kimball said, where the novice picker put little color-coded stick-ems on their fingers that coincide with the chords in the book.

Briant Smith and Terry Green, two guitarists in The Bad Roads, also started hanging around and they told MacDonald to ditch that method “and started showing him how to play,” said Kimball. “He was just starting to pick it up.”

Megan Barra/poster

MacDonald then became a roadie for The Bad Roads.

“And he was the worst roadie in the world,” Kimball said. “We paid him $25 a night to move the equipment. So what he would do is find some yo-yo that knew a little bit about the equipment and pay him $10 and he’d take the $15 and go buy beer. But he could solder really well.

“And if I demonstrate how he soldered, it was a physical thing how his elbows were out when he soldered, you’ll die laughing,” he said. “It was just amazing. He was such a character. We were all characters, bopping around playing music.”

Eventually, Green left the band and Smith took over lead and MacDonald played rhythm.

“He’d been learning how to play the whole time,” said Kimball. “And wanted to learn how to play so he could play Beach Boy songs.”

San Francisco

Kimball was the first of his friends to head out to San Francisco in 1968 and a few months later, MacDonald and Benny Graeff showed up, “because I was out there and said, ‘Man, y’all gotta come out here and check this out.’”

MacDonald was taken by Santana, who hadn’t even released an album yet.

“And then he saw the (Grateful) Dead. He, like, picked up the vibe, the whole thing,” said Kimball, who told his friend to wait until he sees the Sons of Champlin, “one of the top bands in San Francisco. They could give a shit about, ‘making it.’”

Kimball recalled an interview with Jerry Garcia (Grateful Dead) in which the musician was asked who he thought was the best guitarist in the Bay Area and he replied, Terry Haggerty, a guitar player with Sons of Champlin.

“He was a monster,” said Kimball.

MacDonald, at the time, “wasn’t the player we have now. Bruce was fumbling around, but he synthesized those guys,” Kimball said. “That’s where he went and started working from and all that later on came out through him.”

MacDonald, Breaux & Zach

Kimball called “Migration,” Zachary Richard’s “big breakthrough album” in Canada in 1978. MacDonald and Dana Breaux were on guitars.

“It was basically Coteau and Zachary’s songs, as far as I’m concerned,” said Kimball. “Tells you Zachary’s really smart. ‘Migration’ broke him in Canada big time.”

The two guitarists had a unique working relationship and style.

“(MacDonald and Breaux) had all of these dual harmony things going on that were really amazing. Nobody was doing anything like that, having the patience to work all that kind of stuff out and push it the way they did rhythmically,” said Kimball.

Kimball explained:

“Dana and Bruce each had a guitar. A lot of the time they played on different sides of the stage. Bruce would run his extension speaker over to Dana’s amp, so it was sitting right there and Dana’s extension speaker was over on Bruce’s side.

“So they were like immersed in those two guitars. It was weird, it was fascinating,” he said.

In other words, the guitarists could hear what the other was playing and respond at the same time, merging the two guitars into one sound.

“The way they were so in tuned to each other they could pull off those ongoing rides together, harmonic rides and stuff,” said Kimball. “It wasn’t like everybody was trying to shred. It wasn’t about that. It was all these beautiful, melodic things and the rhythm was Cajun rhythms; shuffles and two-steps and everything.”

Reference point

Kimball said MacDonald’s performance at the Medicine Show 2 fundraiser for The Dr. Tommy Comeaux Endowed Chair in Traditional Music at UL Lafayette (captured on the Medicine Show 2 CD, recorded live at Grant Street Dancehall), is a classic example of his guitar skills.

Da Beans, with Kimball on drums, played that night.

“We didn’t have (Tommy) Shreve, he couldn’t make it and (Steve) LeCroix couldn’t make it, he was in Cape Cod,” said Kimball of the line-up that did consist of Gary Newman, bass; Sam Broussard and MacDonald on guitars, Pat Breaux, sax/accordion, Tommy Withrow, piano, and Mike Hanisee, guitars/vocals.

“I think we rehearsed for an hour,” said Kimball. “Our contribution on that CD is a medley of two songs, ‘We Been Runnin’ and ‘The Cuckoo’.

“We went through the set and everything’s going good and then we get into this thing and those two mother fuckers erupted. They just took the fuck over,” Kimball said. “There’s just four guitar rides, two on ‘Runnin’ and two on ‘Cuckoo.’ They both played absolutely brilliantly.
“Bruce had the last run and he ripped the roof off of the fuckin’ place. The roar at the end of that, when we stopped that song, the roar that came off the crowd — they were stunned,” he said. “We were stunned.”

“I listen to it periodically and I still get chills from what he did, and the whole band. But what Bruce did.” A quick pause, and then he continued. “Sam played Sam to the max. And they kind of pushed each other a little bit, you know? And it’s magic. Pure fuckin’ magic.

“So,” Kimball added. “If you want a reference point on Bruce MacDonald’s playing, go to that and listen to the breadth of the chops that that man had.”

Celebration

No different than a New Orleans Jazz Funeral, the celebration of MacDonald, April 20th at the Warehouse, will be just that: a rollicking remembrance of a friend, father and helluva guitar player.

“I don’t see it as mourning a death so much as celebrating a life,” said Kimball. “And what better way to celebrate a musician’s life than to just play some music.”

Kimball expects “a pretty seamless deal. We’re making a CD of recordings that Bruce played on, a lot of songs that he played and sang his songs,” he said. “So we’ll have that swirling around between bands.

“It’s a night of reminiscing, it’s a night of memories and the tribe getting together again like the Medicine Shows where you had to be there because you wanted to see everybody,” he said.

“We’ll just celebrate his life and hopefully people will keep him in their hearts and their minds,” Kimball said. “And hopefully, with all that music he created — there’s a lot of it out there — people will note that this guy was a great guy and a great player.”